Appendix 10: Improving the customer experience Scottish Water is committed to delivering leading customer service to all of our customers. This means we deliver the following activities: We will ensure that all customers, their needs and expectations sit firmly at the heart of our decision making. A comprehensive Voice of the Customer programme will be used to ensure that we are listening to, and acting on, customer feedback in day to day service delivery and in strategic developments. While Licensed Providers and business end user customers will sit within this programme and benefit from all of these developments the plan also includes commitment to deliver enhancements that will meet their specific needs. It is evident that customers expect the same level of service from us as they would from any other service provider we are committed to investing in service channels and technology to ensure services are provided with minimal customer effort at a time and place that suits them. To increase customer awareness and understanding of Scottish Water we will build a dynamic programme of co-created customer information initiatives, through media and community activities. This will be linked to a structured schools education programme. The Customer Experience Measure will be introduced as a critical measure of our performance. The Customer Experience Measure will be used to firmly link customer feedback to a business improvement programme. This dynamic new measure will track performance against the volume of issues impacting on customers as well as how Scottish Water has recovered service. Our services your rights is a new publication that has been developed to increase customer access to Guaranteed Service Standards and Price Promise. We are committed to continue to develop material in this style to ensure customers have easy access to critical service information. Overview This appendix sets out Scottish Water s emerging proposals for improving customers experience, and how we will work with them to build relationships based on a shared understanding and awareness. This includes communication and engagement, response times, services tailored to meet the needs of Licensed Providers and water efficiency. Figure 10.1 Customers relative priorities for further service improvement
Appendix 10: Improving the customer experience 2 Service strategy We are committed to continuously improving customer experience, delivering service levels that are leading among service providers, while working hard to keep bills affordable and ensure value for our customers. In Figure 10.1, above, we set out our customers views of service priorities. Our priorities in terms of the customer experience, as supported by the Customer Forum and highlighted above, are that we will work to provide an outstanding customer service, while improving how we build relationships with our customers. We propose to continue to improve customer service, by working more closely with our customers, and demonstrating to them how we are acting on their feedback. During 2015 to 2021 we will improve service to customers through a series of process improvements as well as implementing new service related capabilities so that by 2021: Through a significant system upgrade our customers will be able to contact us with minimal effort through an extended range of channels allowing customers greater choice including; over the phone, by email, allowing dynamic use of our web site and online services, through social media and of course by letter. This system upgrade will allow us to ensure we always provide easy to access information on our services, and enable customers to request and manage services through direct online access. The speed of our response to customer issues will be reflective of the issue and customers circumstances. During resolution we will always maintain contact and ensure the issue is resolved to the customer s satisfaction. Licensed Providers will find us even easier to deal with as a wholesaler and provide their customers with the levels of service they expect. Customers will have a deeper relationship with Scottish Water in relation to key issues such as water efficiency and waste disposal and be part of initiatives that will deliver better outcomes for them, the environment and their future charges. We have listened to customer feedback which outlines their expectation around our delivery of meaningful and proactive communication and recognise that this will contribute to customers visibility of our services. In particular in the delivery of investment projects a key goal will be to provide a positive customer experience, with community engagement. We will do this through establishing feedback mechanisms and responding to customers needs, always providing relevant information and updates for customers on works in their area. We will work with customers to ensure minimum disruption and where possible provide wider community benefit. Our customer Code of Practice will form the basis of a range of customer service information literature - improved and simplified such that it is easy to access and understand for all customers. A key development in our commitments will be to merge our existing guaranteed service standards and price promise. We will establish a dynamic new measurement to deliver an understanding of our services and performance with all our customers, not just those who are affected by service disruption. We have established an engagement and consultation programme that is influencing the direction of customer cocreated initiatives on subjects such as disposal of waste and water efficiency. This will be the beginning of a journey we will take with our customers to meet their desire to understand our services and connect with us. Opportunities will be identified to ensure that we continue to engage customers in the development of future plans, seeking their involvement in these and explaining our ongoing plans for efficiency and service improvement. At the heart of our plan sit our people and the ongoing need to develop our employee base to ensure that we have the right resources, customer service skills, engagement and motivation to deliver. Through the establishment of an Institute of Customer Service accredited training programme we have secured significant improvements in customer experience and will continue to deliver improvements aligned with customers and their expectations.
Appendix 10: Improving the customer experience 3 Our priorities for improvement Customer Expectations Customers have told us through research that they expect the same high levels of service from us that they would receive from other service providers; this was particularly evident in their desire to see us deliver leading service levels and experience. Customers generally trust that they will have no problems with their waste and water service, however if they do, they want to be able to easily contact Scottish Water and have their issue dealt with quickly and with minimum effort. It is acknowledged that minimising time and effort will become increasingly important drivers of satisfaction therefore they are a key focus of our Service Strategy. Customers have reinforced this view, throughout research activities and ask that we increasingly engage them in improvement works in their area, helping them to understand the services that we provide, the benefit of our investments with a view to building awareness of the value that we provide to them and their community and the role that they could have in improving services. Scottish Water will build a relationship with customers through communicating and engaging with customers in four main ways: When customers contact us with a service issue. When undertaking service improvement (construction) projects we communicate with local communities and individuals who could be affected or benefit from works, delivering proactive engagement events to build relationships and secure involvement in our activities. General awareness campaigns to engage groups of customers. Through the ongoing representative research programme that will continue to shape strategy and policy decisions. We will ensure that we take maximum opportunity to engage customers in each of these opportunities to inform and develop their understanding of the services that we provide. We will seek to build on new opportunities to build relationships with our customers. To become valued and trusted our customers need to know what we do for them. It is important that this partnership with customers is built on a firm foundation of understanding of what value means to them. A number of communication channels will continue to be used to raise general awareness of what Scottish Water does and how customers can support improving services, for example: National media to promote wider customer awareness on issues such as our warm pipes campaign in the run up to winter, and use water wisely in times of low rainfall. Information featured on our website and videos on You Tube to provide customer advice and showing repair works which have been undertaken. Engaging communities through schools and education centres (such as science centres) to support the education of future generations. We will build a mobile education programme, Making It Clear that will offer opportunities to schools across Scotland to give our customers and future generations the chance to participate in hands-on, interactive water themed activities, workshops and science shows where they can learn about water and waste water related topics. Making It Clear will support the 4 capacities, experiences and outcomes of Scotland s Curriculum for Excellence with the aims of embedding science skills and inspiring young people in their choice of career. Scottish school pupils would enjoy sustained science experiences on a water theme. Through specific initiatives such as water efficiency trials and catchment management we are engaging with local communities and stakeholders to develop ways we can work together to deliver a better outcome. As current research confirms that general customer awareness is low, we will embark on a more structured programme of customer engagement. This will be shaped with our customers and will focus on building their understanding of our services through the media and community activities. Contacting Scottish Water Customers can contact Scottish Water 24 hours a day, 7 days a week through our contact centre via the phone, email, by completing a contact form on our website or by letter. All of these communications channels will continue to be managed through our integrated customer relationship management
Appendix 10: Improving the customer experience 4 systems. Customers can follow us on social media; while small at this stage this route is recognised as a channel of choice for some customers and we will continue to develop our presence. In the future we anticipate an increasing number of contacts with Scottish Water will be via social media channels and these will become integrated into our systems to ensure we further improve customer satisfaction. Communicating when improving services When developing projects to improve services our teams will engage with local communities, building partnerships based on trust and value as a foundation for engagement. This will help to inform communications approaches taken (through understanding customers, their needs and concerns). We aim to build tailored communications packages that will engage and involve them in works in their area. We will also continue to work with local media to help build awareness of any work we are doing, informing a wider group of customers on what is happening in their area. Continued investment will be made in our website, to increase ease of access to information, particularly focused on the provision of community updates aligned to the current search by postcode for projects being undertaken in local areas. Contacting Scottish Water During 2015 to 2021 we propose to further improve our communication channels with customers by enhancing our Customer Relationship Management system. Develop integrated channels of choice allowing customers to use whatever communications channels suits them best, be it letter, phone, email, text messaging or social media linked together. A system upgrade will ensure the provision of enhanced contact management which means customers will be able to have a seamless conversation with us across all channels. Develop the online capabilities as technology progresses in conjunction with new systems, which allow customers to move from self help through to requesting services directly on-line by enhancing the ease of accessibility and the capability of our website. Where there is an established customer demand, ensure availability of real time customer service engagement through use of web chat as a contact and interactive channel for customers. Delivery of proactive service updates linked to asset performance. Provide self help information easily accessible through on-line channels. Delivery of local face to face communication, during service issues or times of disruption ensuring consistent and relevant updates when customers need it most. Evolving our approach to allow us to offer customers new communications channels to customers as they are developed. Communicating during service improvements The options for improving communication during service improvements include: Using the opportunity to better inform customers about all of the services we deliver and how customers can communicate with us about what they would like. Working with communities early in the developments to enable partnership development and their input into the aspects of the project that will affect their daily life. Improving general awareness To improve overall awareness of what we do will require a structured approach which will increase overall levels of awareness of who is responsible for water and wastewater service, and how customers can be part of the journey to deliver service improvements. This means: Establishing an understanding of customers level of engagement and needs, while taking in to consideration their views on what value means to them and what will ultimately make a difference. Build, with customer input, an advertising and engagement programme to raise overall awareness of our services and increase sensitivity around issues relating to water and wastewater services.
Appendix 10: Improving the customer experience 5 Customer feedback has identified the expectation that they will receive more information on how they can get involved in delivering improvements. For this reason there will be a series of national and local initiatives which will focus on those service issues that customers can work in partnership with us to help resolve, these may include: Sewer flooding customer engagement initiative; Water efficiency linked to benefits to customers; Warm pipes campaigns in the run up to winter, and Use water wisely campaigns during periods of low rainfall. Outlining Scottish Water s Service Commitments Scottish Water operates within a Customer Service Code of Practice. This Code outlines the minimum service standards that our customers should expect. This document has been developed under the heading Our service Your rights as the first step towards the introduction of a plain English, customer focused set of commitments. The document currently includes details of our Guaranteed Service (GSS) and Price Promise Standards (PPS). Price Promise Standards were introduced by Scottish Water as an industry leading concept in 2010. This standard sits alongside Guaranteed Service Standards and provides rebates of certain charges should we fail, under normal operating conditions, to deliver our minimum guaranteed levels of service. Price Promise Standards generally require customers to actively claim a rebate from Scottish Water. However there are two service areas, low pressure and internal sewer flooding, where customers are identified on Scottish Water registers as not receiving the service expected. In these cases we make proactive rebate payments. Customer research indicates that customers welcome the levels of service commitments and payments, and are recognised as an incentive for us to be more accountable for service, positively affecting perception of Scottish Water. Customers consistently, across all sectors, have expressed timescale of response as an important issue in determining customers satisfaction. There are a number of improvements that we will deliver. These include: Merging the Guaranteed Service Standards and Price Promise Standards schemes into one set of customer commitments. Reviewing the existing service standards and definitions, particularly those within Price Promise Standards to ensure clarity. Investigating the opportunities to introduce proactive/ automated payments to customers in recognition of service interruptions in areas such as unplanned interruptions. This move will need to be closely aligned to system and knowledge investments and will support improvements in service experience as a driver to reduce interruptions as well as a proactive offer to customers when we recognise interruptions have occurred. Introducing a communications commitment and care process for those customers who feature on service improvement registers. Scottish Water will continue to evolve the Code of Practice suite of customer information to ensure accessibility for all customer groups. Documents will be provided at key customer touch points and through partner organisations such as local authority libraries and Citizen Advice Services. Measuring customer experience Scottish Water has consistently improved customer satisfaction levels since 2003 (see Figure 10.2) and is committed to further improving end to end customer journeys to deliver leading service levels. Central to our Service Strategy is the commitment to minimise disruptions to customers, but where incidents do occur we always aim to deliver first time resolution and leading service recovery.
Appendix 10: Improving the customer experience 6 Figure 10.2 Customer satisfaction (%) over time The Customer Experience Score was introduced in 2010 to track ongoing customer satisfaction levels. It has been at the heart of a cultural change that has been felt across Scottish Water. The Customer Experience Score has established ownership of customer satisfaction and is closely aligned to our service improvement plan. It is proposed that this measurement tool sits at the heart of a new performance measure that Scottish Water will introduce in 2015. The Customer Experience Measure will ensure that delivery of service to customers continues to be a key driver of Scottish Water s performance. Similar to the Service Incentive Measure established by Ofwat, the Customer Experience Measure will combine quantitative contact metrics with qualitative customer research feedback. The Customer Experience Measure will ensure continued focus on delivering what is right for customers throughout the business. The Measure will be a key tool that Scottish Water will use to monitor and demonstrate the delivery of improvements on behalf of its customers. Licensed Provider services While Licensed Providers and their customers will benefit from all of the improvements that Scottish Water will deliver, Licensed Providers also have some specific service expectations and needs, as they compete with each other to service their non-household customers. Since 2008 all business customers are provided with services through Licensed Providers who buy wholesale services from Scottish Water and offer retail services to their customers as shown in Figure 10.3. Figure 10.3 Non-household customers market arrangements Billing Licensed Provider 1 Scottish Water Central Market Agency Meter Readings Licensed Provider 2 Licensed Provider 3 Licensed Provider 4 Non household customers Service Contacts Figure 3 Non-household customers market arrangements
Appendix 10: Improving the customer experience 7 The way in which Scottish Water interacts with Licensed Providers should be invisible to business customers, as the customer interface is managed by the Licensed Provider. These detailed interactions with Licensed Providers are governed by the market framework arrangements and will continue to evolve over the coming years as they have done since the market opened. We will continue to work closely with Licensed Providers to ensure we provide them with the service that they and their customers need to meet changing expectations. Licensed Provider Communication with Scottish Water In the same way as Scottish Water is proposing to offer enhanced on-line services and communication through electronic media to the household customers, we are planning to develop similar services for Licensed Providers allowing them to meet the needs of business customers efficiently and effectively. Areas currently being explored include: Offering Licensed Providers the ability to book appointments on-line, to meet the needs of their customers in a seamless way, Providing the ability to check the status of a job on line; and, Enhancements to the current notification process for planned work notifications, through the use of enhanced web portal capabilities and communication media. Response levels Business customers expect the same level of response as household customers when there is an issue with their service. Where we introduce changes to improve response times, these will apply to business customers as well, although communications will follow the processes which apply to the competitive market. Tariff structures Our research has shown that business customers wish us to review the existing charging arrangements. We will work with Licensed Providers, the Scottish Government and the Water Industry Commission to explore possible future wholesale charging arrangements that would be consistent with Minister s principles of charging. Business metering Scottish Water is obliged to install meters at all business premises with a water supply where this is practicable. All new business premises connecting to the water supply for the first time are metered. Annual volumes of these are subject to the normal pressures of economic growth and development. Additionally as premises merge, divide or change use, there is further churn in the market, leading to a need for removal of old meters and installation of new meters. We currently offer a choice of meters to Licensed Providers and their customers through a meter menu. The selection of meters by Scottish Water and the choices available on the meter menu will continue to be kept under review, taking on board wider manufacturer and industry developments. We currently consult with Licensed Providers on issues affecting meter choice on an annual basis and will continue to do so. In terms of meter choice, customers and Licensed Providers may choose to use smart metering technology, which allows consumption to be read automatically and logged over time allowing business customers to manage their consumption. This technology is currently more expensive than a traditional meter to install. Licensed Providers can also chose to instruct suitably accredited companies to undertake certain metering, new connection and data logging activities, thus offering choice and flexibility. The framework supporting this is still in its early stages and we will continue to support its development. Licensed Providers and business customers have identified the importance of meter accuracy to ensure that volumes of water consumed and bills are accurate. To improve overall accuracy, and support advanced metering infrastructure, it is recommended meters are replaced every 15 years. Investigations show that this frequency would allow us to continue to assure Licensed Providers and business customers that consumption and bills are accurate. It is forecast that around 84,000 meters will require to be replaced between 2015 and 2021.
Appendix 10: Improving the customer experience 8 Customer advice services In our plan we have set out two areas where we wish to engage with our customers to deliver better outcomes for Scotland. Firstly we have launched our campaign to raise awareness and sensitivity of the issues of sewer flooding caused by the inappropriate disposal of waste items down toilets and drains. Secondly, we will continue with our communication and engagement activities related to the efficient use of water and how this can benefit customers, for example by reducing their energy bills through the use of less heated water. This is an area that we are keen to explore further with customers to understand other areas where we can provide advice or added value services to our customers. Scottish Water Draft Business Plan 2015 to 2021 October 2013